State v. Ribbel

141 P.3d 490, 111 Haw. 317
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 22, 2006
Docket26525
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 P.3d 490 (State v. Ribbel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ribbel, 141 P.3d 490, 111 Haw. 317 (hawapp 2006).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

WATANABE, J.

This appeal stems from a seat belt enforcement campaign conducted by the Maui Police Department (MPD) on November 18, 2003 that resulted in Defendant-Appellant Denise Ribbel (Ribbel) being cited for operating a motor vehicle on a public highway without a *318 seat belt, in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 291-11.6 (Supp.2005) (the seat belt statute). It was undisputed at trial that when Ribbel was cited, she was wearing the lap portion of the seat belt. She was also wearing the shoulder harness portion of the seat belt, although it was tucked under her left arm rather than over her shoulder. Rib-bel’s defense at trial was that, based on the undisputed evidence, she was restrained by a seat belt assembly, as required by the seat belt statute.

The District Court of the Second Circuit (the district court or the court) 1 rejected Ribbel’s defense and concluded that the seat belt was “meant to be worn the way it’s assembled properly, over the shoulder and across the lap” and that wearing the shoulder harness under an armpit constituted “an illegal use of the assembly.” Accordingly, the district court found Ribbel “guilty” of violating the seat belt statute, entered judgment for Plaintiff-Appellee State of Hawaii (the State), and ordered Ribbel to pay fines, fees, and costs amounting to $77.00.

This appeal from the district court’s written Judgment, entered on April 19, 2004, followed. We reverse and remand for dismissal of the charge against Ribbel and the refund to Ribbel of any fines, fees, and costs that may have been paid by her.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On November 18, 2003, Officer Keith Ta-guma (Officer Taguma) was working on MPD’s seat belt enforcement team, “specifically looking for any motor vehicle travelling on a public roadway with any front seat passengers unrestrained or any children in the rear seats unrestrained.” Shortly before 2:50 p.m., he observed a “two[-]door Ford, about a[n] '80 something model” headed “eastbound on Wakea Avenue toward the Lono Avenue intersection.” Officer Taguma noticed that the seat belt assembly of the driver of the vehicle was “pulled down tucked under [the driver’s] left arm.” Officer Tagu-ma thereupon activated the lights on his police car, pulled the vehicle over, and cited Ribbel, the driver, for violating the seat belt statute.

At Ribbel’s trial, Officer Taguma explained how he could tell that the shoulder harness of the seat belt was under Ribbel’s arm:

First of all, the portion, one piece assembly, the belt pulls out from the side panel of the vehicle. When you pull it out and you put the male portion into the female portion on the right side of the seat, the shoulder harness should be over your shoulder blade, down in front you to secure your upper body from front movement. The lap belt would come out from the bottom and be strapped over your lower pelvis area and that secures your body into the chair.
On [Ribbel’s] belt, the belt was pulled down. You could clearly see the buckle was hanging straight down and under the left arm. There was no shoulder harness over her body.

Officer Taguma testified that Ribbel was not in an emergency vehicle, mass transit vehicle, or taxi cab. Additionally, Ribbel did not have any visible physical condition that would prevent her use of a seat belt, and she did not mention any such condition.

Officer Taguma stated that upon approaching Ribbel’s vehicle, he informed Ribbel that she was in violation of the seat belt statute because “the seat belt assembly [was] not properly worn[.]” On cross-examination, Officer Taguma confirmed that when he stopped the vehicle, Ribbel had her lap belt on, but her shoulder harness was tucked under her arm.

The following colloquy then ensued between the district court and Ribbel:

THE COURT: ....
What’s your defense? That’s not the proper way.
[RIBBEL]: I had the seat belt on.
THE COURT: When you wear it like that you violating the seat belt. It’s meant to protect—
[RIBBEL]: Your Honor, if I may. I went and looked in the HRC’s (sic) and it says you have to wear the seat belt assembly, and I do. I wear, you know, the lap belt, and then I tuck it under my arm, *319 across this way and under my arm, because my car is a convertible. Where the retractor thing-—-where it comes out of the door panel—the side panel of the car, it’s down below my shoulder.
If you need to know why I do it this way is because it pulls down on my shoulder and my arm will go to sleep and it hurts first, and then it goes to sleep. And it takes awhile to get it back and so that’s not safe to operate the car. So when I have to drive I put it across and under here.
THE COURT: You going lose. With that argument you already losing.
[RIBBEL]: But I have it on.
THE COURT: No, no. The seat belt assembly is made to be worn—
[RIBBEL]: So I should just go ahead and go without it.
THE COURT: Then you get seat belt. It’s meant to be worn the way it’s assembled properly, over the shoulder and across the lap. You can not [ (sic) ] just decide on your own that now the shoulder harness, you going to put under your armpit. That’s an illegal use of the assembly.
So you really have no defense. If you’re saying, well, your arm—
[RIBBEL]: I was wealing the seat belt though.
THE COURT: No, wearing the seat belt is wearing it—wearing the assembly the way it’s made to be worn is not under the armpit. All of the literature show that that will cause more injury rather than less injury. That’s why they make it to go over your upper torso, not under your arm.
[RIBBEL]: I was—I was wearing—I had it budded. I feel that is safer to at least have that and across here—
THE COURT: Well, if you feel—
[RIBBEL]:—then to not where [ (sic) ] it at all is what I’m saying.
THE COURT:—you feel it’s safer, but the experts will tell you you endangering yourself more.
[RIBBEL]: Well, it’s—at least I had it plugged in.
THE COURT: All right, I’m going to find in favor of the State. You pay the 45, the 10 neuro trauma, 15 admin, $7.00 driver’s ed.
Seat belt is not meant to be worn the way you think it should be worn. It’s made to be worn the way the manufacturer invented it to be worn.

DISCUSSION

A.

HRS § 291-11.6 provides currently, as it did when Ribbel was cited for violating the statute, in relevant part, as follows:

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Related

State v. Massey
887 N.E.2d 151 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2008)
State v. Ribbel
142 P.3d 290 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P.3d 490, 111 Haw. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ribbel-hawapp-2006.